 Mae'r mynd i gwanchau arsig yng Nghymru ac mae'r cyllideb sydd yn unig. Mae'r cyllideb sydd yn gweithio gweld ei geografigol, ond yn ymwneud y ffordd iawn yn y ffordd iawn, ac mae'n mynd i allanol i gweithio'r llunio cyfweld. Dwi'n mynd i gwynebu, ar hyn yn Chyno, mae'r cyllideb sydd yn cyfweld yn llunio, ac yn ymwneud yn Ymwneud i'r llunio, mae'n unig i'r llunio cyfweld Merthyr Cymru. Mae'n cyfweld yn llunio cyfweld. ac yna'r cyd-cryll pŷwys yn ysgolodod y byddwyr yn ymgyrch i ddweud ar gyfer cyfaint ac yw'r cyd-cynghwyr yn ei ddweud ddweud o'r ddweud o'r cyd-cynghwyr yn dda, yw eu bod yn ymgyrch i'n gwneud i'w cyffredin ni, yn ymgyrch i'w ddweud o'r cyd-cynghwyr yn ysgolod y byddwyr yn ymgyrch. Mae'r ffordd o'r argymru yn ysgolod am hyn, dyma, yn ni'n gweithio'r gwahanol o'r amser o gweithio'r cyd-cynghwyr. On dweud bod yna y gallwn am y gallwn gwahanol y blokchain, ond rym ni'n bryddoedd y cwmpas, i ddweud i ddweud i'w lleiol y bwysig. Rydyn ni'n gwybod yw'r gweithio ar gyfer cyffredinol, felly rydyn ni'n bwysig i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud eich cyffredinol. Rydyn ni'n bwysig i ddweud eu cael ei gallwn. Mae'n ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i gael gwybodaeth o boblion o ddweud i ddweud i gael gweithio'r blokchain. But they're not quite as well-established in the minds of sometimes quite traditional corporations that are still concerned about how their data is managed, particularly if they're providing data into an environment where, by definition, you are sharing a proportion of it to create transparency. Yliadr Hyffman Yn e'w sefysig a'r byddoedd oiaeth, Ondwr EurloMusic yn yma, Andreas, rydyn ni'n ffordd ar gyfer ddechrau blef? Rydyn ni'n ddweud, y cyfnodro blok chain gweithio yn fwy o gael gwahanol hyd dim, ond mae'n bwynau bod eu bod hi'n ddweud bod y gyfnoddau hynny sy'n ddweud bod yn ymgyrch yn ymgyrch gyfnoddau teulu, yn y context Ыriadau Cymru. Ond ydych chi'n gyfnoddau cyfnoddau cyfnoddau cyfnoddau yw eisiau gallu cyfnoddau cyfnoddau yma. Mae'n gweithio, mae'n gweithio, ower ond mae'n gweithio, ond cael ei wneud o'r cyd-blogwrs, mae'n gwybod. First of all, mae'n rhai cyd-blogwr. Mae'r cyd-blogwr yn cyd-blogwr, nid yw'r cyd-blogwr. Felly byw'r wneud am y maen nhw'n cyd-blogwr, dweud o'r cyd-blogwr yn y gynnig iawn, a'r cyd-blogwr yn y dyfodol. Felly mae'n ddiwedd o'r cyd-blogwr. Felly mae yna'r cyd-blogwr o'r cyd-blogwr. We want to use blockchain, so that sometimes I think in the past it was too technology to them, I think. Okay, yeah, and we'll dig into that a little bit in a bit, and also the fact that you're really onboarding different levels of people with expertise and resources into these consortiums or into these blockchain networks as well. Alex, tell us a little bit about, you know, why, from a Web3 perspective, the work that SEAL storage and Filecoin is doing is really important from a climate perspective. Absolutely, so part of the value that you get from using a distributed ledger, particularly Filecoin as a blockchain, is what we've talked about a bunch here, which is that trustless factor. So people can look at that and say this data has an absolute value to it. It's not something that somebody is making up. And I think the big application here, one of the big applications, is with greenwashing. For those of you who don't know what greenwashing is, it's when a company submits some form of misleading data, false data, or potentially delay different statistics in order to present a better outcome to the public in terms of what their environmental impact is. So I think if you actually have an accurate record of up-to-date information, but what your mission standards are, what your environmental impact standards are, you can create that system where people can actually look into that and see for themselves whether you're truthful in that sense. And I think right now greenwashing is a significant problem, and it's not something that necessarily has an easy answer, but I think blockchain really does have a very good solution for that. And another element that was discussed here from a supply chain perspective is it really helps people in the manufacturing side of things or our client side of things measure their scope to in three emissions, which is essentially in a very simplistic way. It's your downstream or broader emissions. So not exactly what you create manufacturing. For example, when we buy different hardware or different other elements that the company needs to function, that type of manufacturer can look at our specific data and say when I'm measuring my scope too, this is what my boxes or my hardware or my compute is being used and this is the energy associated with that, which can create a more accurate system for them to present to their overall stakeholders. And from a customer perspective, you can actually see, well, where's my data going? What type of impact is that having? So even somebody who's doing really good work from a climate perspective, they don't necessarily want to put it in a provider that has a high usage of coal or in an area that has something that's particularly negative for the environment. So it really allows different stakeholders to look and say, what am I getting into from an environmental perspective? What is the emission impact that I'm willing to digest by working with this potential vendor or customer? And in the broader ESG landscape, not so environmental, but I think it's really good for a misinformation discussion. So we were very excited to be selected for the project with the Shoah Foundation and Starling Labs, which for those of you who don't know is a project to document 55,000 videos from Holocaust survivors. So we've got the testimonials being uploaded into the Filecoin ecosystem as a way for further generations to look back and say here's all these different facts and stories and prove that for the future. And I also think that applies to misinformation regarding environmental standards as well as other people's historicals when it comes to their previous environmental.